Treatment with the SQ tree sublingual immunotherapy tablet is safe and well tolerated in real-life

Oliver Pfaar*, Hendrik Wolf, Rainer Reiber, André Knulst, Kirsten Sidenius, Mika J. Mäkelä, Sverre Steinsvåg, Christer Janson, Leonard van der Zwan, Elena Uss, Peter Arvidsson, Kathrin Borchert, Helena Himmelhaus, Eike Wüstenberg

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Background: The SQ tree sublingual immunotherapy (SLIT)-tablet is authorised for treatment of allergic rhinoconjunctivitis with or without asthma in trees of the birch homologous group in 21 European countries. The primary objective of this study was to explore the safety in real-life. Methods: In a prospective, non-interventional post-authorisation safety study (EUPAS31470), adverse events (AEs) and adverse drug reactions (ADRs) at first administration and follow-up visits, symptoms, medication use, and pollen food syndrome were recorded by physicians in 6 European countries during the first 4–6 months of treatment. Results: ADRs with the SQ tree SLIT-tablet were reported in 57.7% of 1069 total patients (median age 36.0 years, 53.7% female) during the entire observation period (severity, mild-to-moderate: 70.1%, severe: 4.7%, serious: 0.7%) and in 45.9% after first administration. ADRs were not increased with pollen exposure at first administration. With coadministration of the SQ tree and grass SLIT-tablet AEs were reported in 73.8% of patients and in 52.8% with the SQ tree SLIT-tablet alone. Nasal and eye symptoms improved in 86.9% and 80.9% of patients and use of symptomatic medication in 76.0%. PFS with symptoms was reported in 43.0% of patients at baseline and in 4.3% at the individual last visit. Conclusions: The results of this non-interventional safety study with the SQ tree SLIT-tablet confirm the safety profile from placebo-controlled clinical trials and support effectiveness in real-life according to the published efficacy data. Safety was not impaired by pollen exposure at first administration or co-administration with other SLIT-tablets.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere12373
Number of pages12
JournalClinical and Translational Allergy
Volume14
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2024

Keywords

  • allergen immunotherapy
  • post-authorisation safety study
  • real-life
  • SQ tree-SLIT-tablet
  • tolerability

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